February 2021 |
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Building Automation Opportunities to Meet NYC Emission Laws in Existing Buildings New York City’s Local Law 97 mandates large (over 25,000 square feet) existing buildings in New York City reduce their carbon emissions by 40% by 2030 |
By Michael
St. Louis and Graham Martin, EnOcean Alliance Inc |
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Building Automation Opportunities to Meet NYC
Emission Laws in Existing Buildings
·
New York City’s Local Law 97
mandates large (over 25,000 square feet) existing
buildings in New York City reduce
their carbon emissions by 40% by 2030 and by 80%
by 2050. What are the requirements and opportunities for
building owners and operators?
By Michael
St. Louis and Graham Martin, EnOcean Alliance Inc.
“With so
many people and cars in NYC, it can be hard to believe that our buildings are
the number one contributor of harmful emissions” said NYC Council Member Andrew
Cohnen. (1) There are approximately one million buildings in New
York City (residential and non-residential) which account for 71% of New York
City greenhouse gas emissions (2).
Local Law
No. 97 of 2019, passed as part of the Climate Mobilization Act by the New York
City Council in March 2019, requires large (over 25,000 square feet) existing
buildings in New York City reduce their emissions by 40% by 2030 and 80% by
2050 (compared to base year 2005).
The law is
unique and novel in its aim, because it targets existing buildings and requires
owners to invest in renovation and retrofitting to make their buildings more
energy-efficient. The New York Post has called the law “one of the most
ambitious climate legislations for buildings enacted by any city in the world.”
(3)
The law
covers approximately 50,000 buildings which account for around 30% of citywide emissions(4),
meaning that this individual law is aiming to reduce all emissions in the
city by one quarter by 2050. Firstly, buildings will have to be retrofitted by
2024 or building owners will face severe penalties for emissions above the
specified limits, i.e. $268/year per metric ton above the limit. It is estimated that the average
building violation could reach approximately $162,772 by 2024 and the total
value of fines faced by all affected buildings will reach approximately $330.4
million in 2024, and $695.6 million by 2030 (5). All buildings covered by the law must submit an emissions intensity
report on May 1st every year starting from 2025. The emission limits
will be tightened every 5-year period up to 2050.
The costs involved
for the building owners or businesses will quickly run into billions of dollars
throughout the city, so it is important to understand what has to be done and
where potential returns can be expected, e.g. through lower energy bills,
through creating more attractive properties (higher rents) or potentially
through new government incentive schemes.
What are
the options for building owners / operators to reduce their building’s carbon emissions?
Some common strategies include:
-
Investing
in the building envelope, such as insulated windows, walls or roofs.
-
Upgrading
to energy-efficient technical equipment such as air conditioning and heating
systems.
-
Installation
of building automation and control, e.g. for lighting and temperature control.
All of these
strategies are effective ways of decreasing the carbon emission, but what are
the practicalities involved and what is the return on investment period?
Saving Energy and Money with Building Automation
and Intelligent Control Systems
Investing significantly
in the building envelope can typically yield an energy saving of 50% and
beyond. This is typically a huge investment and is invasive during the
retrofit, potentially having to close down part or all of the building during
this period. Return on investment can typically be a multiple of decades.
Upgrading
to energy-efficient technical equipment such as HVAC units can yield energy
savings of 10% to 60%, depending on building type and status of existing
equipment, and will typically provide a return on investment within around a
decade. Installation may be with restricted disruption to building operation.
Installation
of building automation and control systems can yield energy savings of
typically 10% to 50%, depending primarily on the use-case of the building, and
will typically provide a return on investment in three to eight years, in
exceptional cases even down to less than two years. Installation, if using
wireless sensors, can be virtually without disruption to building operation. This
can be a game changer in multiple building types such as hospitals, care homes,
government or educational facilities, hotels or retail where disruption or
partial closure can be costly or virtually impossible.
Building
automation and control systems have the added value of increasing the comfort
and security of a building, which in a commercial environment can lead to increased
productivity and health and wellness of employees and / or building tenants.
Going Wireless with Energy Harvesting
If tenants
make up a large portion of energy use within a building, it will be absolutely
necessary to have their cooperation and buy-in on any major energy-efficient
retrofit. Considering the millions of sensors necessary for New York alone, these
sensors must be standardized, wireless, maintenance-free (self-powered) and
easy to retrofit. With building automation and control, the benefits of least
invasion (noise, mess, shut-down, loss of revenue etc.) as well as lowest cost
and fastest return on investment have become the most compelling way of taking
the first steps to reaching the required goals. The sensors required can be
installed by simply “peel and sticking” wherever appropriate and today’s sensors
which power themselves through energy harvesting (e.g. room light, temperature
differences, mechanical movement) can be maintenance-free for decades. The
added feature of being able to monitor and control your space using cell-phones
or other internet-capable devices from anywhere in the world is also attractive
to tenants and building users, making buy-in easier.
A Reliable Partner Eco System
There are a
number of radio standards for building automation and intelligent control
systems on the market. One which is particularly good for building automation
is the EnOcean Alliance wireless standard (ISO/ IEC 14543-3-11) in sub 1GHz frequency. Optimized
for use in buildings the sensor’s radio has a typical range of approximately 100
feet/30 m indoors. The interoperability of different suppliers’
end-products is an important success factor when it comes to retrofitting and
extending building automation. The EnOcean Alliance eco system provides over 5,000 product variants
using the EnOcean radio.
The EnOcean
Alliance based in California is a standards-based mutual benefit organization
consisting of 400 companies from the building automation community who are
specialized in creating solutions for energy-efficient, comfortable and secure
buildings. Founded on an international open wireless standard, the organization’s
offers enhance building energy management with a unique feature that the
sensors and switches power themselves using energy harvesting techniques. This
means no pulling cables to sensors, no opening walls, no noise nor mess during
installation and never a battery to replace. The German technology, originally
created by industry pioneer EnOcean (a spin-off from Siemens), has been
installed into over 1 million buildings since its first generation introduction
20 years ago.
Sustainable Buildings with a Sustainable
Technology
Solutions from EnOcean Alliance partners
using EnOcean’s resource-saving energy harvesting technology in their products
form the basis for energy efficiency and CO2 reduction of new and existing
buildings. The energy harvesting technology from EnOcean enables new and
existing buildings to be sustainably digitalized and to reach a better CO2
footprint without any cables or battery waste in a short period of time –
supporting New York building owners to meet all requirements of New York City’s
Local Law 97.
Picture
credits: Getty Images/Petmal
References:
(1) New York City Council Press Council to Vote on Climate
Mobilization Act ahead of Earth Day - Press (nyc.gov)
April 2019
(2) "To Fight Climate Change, New York City Will Push
Skyscrapers To Slash Emissions". NPR.org. Retrieved May 2020
(3)
Nonko, Emily (January 16th 2020). "NYC buildings prepare to drastically reduce
emissions to avoid penalties". New York Post.
(4)
DiChristopher, Tom (April 18th 2019). "New York City embraces pillar of AOC's Green New
Deal, passing building emissions bill". CNBC.
(5) www.cany.com Retrieved January 2021
Authors:
Michael St. Louis,
Marketing Working Group N. America EnOcean Alliance. Sales EnOcean Inc.
Graham Martin,
Chairman & CEO EnOcean Alliance Inc.
graham.martin@enocean-alliance.org
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